A data storage medium such as an optical disc with separate image and data tracks, and a method and apparatus for forming the same. The medium has a user data storage area with a data track to store user data, and a non-user data image track to store human readable information to form a watermark interspersed with the user data. Preferably, the data track forms a portion of a first spiral and the image track forms a portion of a distinct second spiral nested within the first spiral. Alternatively, the data and image tracks are nested concentric circles. An increased track pitch is preferably provided for the data tracks in the data storage area adjacent the watermark to accommodate the intervening image tracks, and a reduced track pitch between data tracks is provided elsewhere. The medium can be pre-recorded or recordable.
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15. An apparatus comprising a data storage medium with a user data storage area which stores user data, said storage area comprising a plurality of data tracks on which user data are stored and a plurality of image tracks on which human readable information is digitally encoded to form at least a portion of a human readable watermark on said medium, wherein user data are not stored on said image tracks and each respective image track is disposed between a different pair of immediately adjacent data tracks.
11. An apparatus comprising a mastering system configured to write data to a data storage medium to provide a user data storage area thereon which stores user data, said storage area comprising a plurality of data tracks on which user data are stored and a plurality of image tracks on which human readable information is digitally encoded to form at least a portion of a human readable watermark on said medium, wherein user data are not stored on said image tracks and each respective image track is disposed between a different pair of immediately adjacent data tracks.
1. An apparatus comprising a data storage medium with a user data storage area which stores user data, said storage area comprising a first track on which user data are stored and a second track adjacent the first track on which human readable information is stored to form at least a portion of a human readable watermark on said medium, wherein user data are not stored on said second track, wherein the first track forms a portion of a first spiral and the second track forms a portion of a distinct second spiral nested within the first spiral, wherein the first spiral is characterized as comprising a plurality of successively adjacent data tracks to which user data are stored, and wherein the second spiral is characterized as comprising a plurality of successively adjacent image tracks to which the human readable information is stored, wherein each selected one of the plurality of successively adjacent image tracks is disposed between an immediately adjacent pair of the successively adjacent data tracks.
10. An apparatus comprising a data storage medium with a user data storage area which stores user data, said storage area comprising a first track on which user data are stored and a second track adjacent the first track on which human readable information is stored to form at least a portion of a human readable watermark on said medium, wherein user data are not stored on said second track, wherein the data storage area further comprises a first set of successively adjacent data tracks to which user data are stored and a second set of successively adjacent data tracks to which user data are stored, wherein the data tracks of the first set are provided with a first track pitch comprising a separation distance between respective centerlines of adjacent pairs of said data tracks, wherein the data tracks of the second set are provided with a second track pitch greater than the first track pitch, and wherein a plurality of image tracks are interspersed between adjacent pairs of the data tracks of the second set to provide the human readable watermark.
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The present application makes a claim of domestic priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/719,065 filed Sep. 21, 2005.
The present invention relates generally to the field of digital data storage and more particularly, but without limitation, to a data storage medium with separate image and data tracks, and a method for forming the same.
Digital data storage media often store data in an encoded format such that the data can be recovered from the media via a transducer and recovery signal processing electronics.
A particularly useful type of storage medium is an optical disc, which is generally portable in nature and can store any number of different types of data such as video, audio, computer ROM, etc. Optical discs are often commercially offered in accordance with industry proposed standards, such as DVD, DVD-HD, Blu-Ray, Mini-Disc, CD, CD-ROM, etc. Optical discs can further be pre-recorded or recordable (once or many times), and can have single or multiple data storage layers.
Generally, pre-recorded optical discs are formed using an injection molding or similar “pressing” operation whereby a series of pits and lands are formed along a number of tracks (one continuous spiral, a number of discrete concentric rings, etc.). The elevational difference between the pits and lands is selected to provide different effective reflectivities therebetween, allowing the transducer to detect each pit/land transition and form the readback signal therefrom.
Recordable optical discs are often configured such that localized areas on the disc undergo a spectral transformation during recording to provide areas of different reflective characteristics that function in a manner similar to the pits and lands in a recorded disc.
It is sometimes desirable to provide human readable information on a portion of an optical disc or other medium. This human readable information, sometimes referred to as a “watermark,” can include graphics, title or content information, processing information, machine readable information (OCR, barcodes, etc.), and so on.
There have been a number of techniques proposed in the art to provide such information on a medium. Nevertheless, with the continued consumer demand for digital content from storage media (particularly optical discs), there remains a continual need for improvements in the manner in which such information can be provided. It is to these and other improvements that the present invention is generally directed.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention are generally directed to a data storage medium with separate image and data tracks, and a method and apparatus for forming the same.
In accordance with preferred embodiments, the medium is provided with a user data storage area comprising a data track to store user data, and a non-user data image track to store human readable information. The human readable information forms a portion of a human readable watermark interspersed with the user data.
Preferably, the data track forms a portion of a first spiral and the image track forms a portion of a distinct, second spiral nested within the first spiral. Alternatively, the data and image tracks are formed as nested concentric circles on the medium.
An increased track pitch is preferably provided for the data tracks in the data storage area adjacent the watermark to accommodate the intervening image tracks, and a reduced track pitch between data tracks is provided elsewhere within the data storage area not adjacent to the watermark. The medium is preferably characterized as a pre-recorded or recordable optical disc. The optical disc can be a single layer or multi-layer disc, and the image data can extend across multiple layers.
These and various other features and advantages, which characterize the present invention, will be apparent from a reading of the following detailed description and a review of the associated drawings.
The disc 100 has a data storage area 102 in which user data (content) are stored along a number of tracks. Human readable information (e.g., a “watermark”) is depicted at 104 to provide a human readable pattern. This information is distinct from, and interspersed with, the user data in a manner explained below. The watermark in
A second exemplary medium 110 is depicted in
The watermarks 104, 114 are formed on separate non-data tracks between the data tracks of the data storage areas. This is preferably accomplished by increasing the normal track-to-track separation (track pitch) of the data tracks to provide sufficient area therebetween to accommodate the image data.
As shown in
As shown by
It will be understood that the image data spiral 122 is configured to provide the requisite pixelization to render the watermark visible and with the intended human observable characteristics. The features of the image data spiral 122 may have similar, or alternatively very different, lengths, widths, depths, etc. than the pits and lands on the user data spiral 120. In a preferred embodiment, the image data are formed using the same equipment as is used to form the data tracks, although such is not necessarily required.
Preferably, the inter-track spacing between the user data spiral 120 and the image data spiral 122 will be maintained at a substantially constant distance, and this distance is preferably set at the nominal inter-track spacing for that type of disc or other medium. In such case, the region of the disc having both spirals will generally have about 50% of the data storage capacity that a comparative portion of the disc would have if only user data tracks were utilized. Such reduction in data capacity may not present a significant problem, since the reduction only occurs in the radial band in which the watermark extends, and because the watermark preferably only affects the data capacity of a single layer of the disc.
In applications where the watermark only occupies a portion of the entire radial extent of the data storage area, the remaining portions of the data storage area will preferably not include the image data spiral 122 and the user data spiral 120 will preferably utilize a conventional inter-track spacing distance, such as represented in
While a single image track is shown between each pair of adjacent user data tracks, such is not limiting; in alternative embodiments, multiple image tracks can be inserted between adjacent data tracks, and vice versa. Moreover, one form of track can be spiral and the other can be concentric, as desired.
The respective image data tracks and user data tracks exemplified in
The master disc 142 preferably comprises a layer of photoresist on a glass base that is controllably rotated by a motor 144. The photoresist is selectively exposed by an optical transducer 146, which advances radially across the disc via actuator 148.
At this point it will be noted that the use of photoresist is preferred but not required. Those skilled in the art will recognize that other master disc generation techniques have been developed in the art and can alternatively be utilized, such as non-photo-resist (NPR) or phase-transition-mastering (PTM) techniques which generally form detectable features upon recording to the master disc.
A control circuit 150, which may include a programmable processor and other hardware or firmware components, receives respective input data from source 152 and image data from source 154, and provides the requisite signal processing to provide a data stream to encoder block 156. The encoder 156 generates an extended frequency modulated (EFM) signal which modulates the write beam of the transducer 146.
When the image data and user data are arranged in respective spirals as represented in
An alternative mastering system 160 is set forth by
While the watermark images can be formed by modulating the respective lengths, widths and/or depths of pits and lands otherwise readable by a readback system, as mentioned above it is expressly contemplated in preferred embodiments that the image data is not used to encode user data intended to be returned to a user. That is, while the particular methodology utilized to form the pixels of the watermark image may in fact use pit and land characteristics that could result in a useful data readback signal, it is contemplated that such data will be separate from, and not form a portion of, the data content intended to be supplied to the user (e.g., video or A/V works, computer ROM programming, audio data, etc.).
It is contemplated that under certain circumstances a readback system may inadvertently lock onto the image data and initiate an undesired readback sequence therefrom. Accordingly, the image tracks/spirals are preferably configured with features that cause the readback system to desist following said image data and move to adjacent user data.
In
Similarly, image track 188 is largely concentric, but includes a spiral tail portion 192 that merges with data track 182. In this case, should the transducer inadvertently initiate track following along image track 188, the tail portion 192 will ultimately guide the transducer back onto the data track 182.
As mentioned previously, the dual user/image data arrangement as embodied herein can be provided on a pre-recorded or a recordable (once or many times) disc or other medium.
One way to provide the image data to a recordable medium is to start with a master disc, write wiggle pregrooves (ATIP) for the data tracks/spiral, and then concurrently or subsequently write the final desired “pixelization” pattern along the image tracks/spiral, as discussed above.
In this case, once the replicated media are formed from this glass master (via stamper generation, etc.), the desired graphics will generally be on every single replicated, recordable disc in relation to the pixelization pattern laid down during mastering. This is particularly advantageous when the graphics are “global” in nature (e.g., the graphics identify a trade name or brand of a given supplier or source of the recordable discs, etc.).
Under this methodology, the data track/spiral areas are generally the only portions of the medium available for recording of data by the end user or the content provider. For simplicity sake, the recordable dye layer could extend all the way across the disc (and would remain transparent over the user data). In an alternative approach, the discs are processed so that the dye layer is selectively laid out to generally only lie proximate the recordable data track/spiral.
Another preferred way to provide the image data on recordable discs generally involves forming separate wiggle pregrooves both for the data track/spiral and the image track/spiral portions. Sync words or another suitable mechanism are preferably applied to the image track so that the recorder can distinguish between the image tracks and user data tracks.
In this situation, the “blank” replicated recordable media will in fact be blank initially, both with respect to recorded user data and with respect to the image. It would then be possible for either the supplier of the blank media, or a content provider who adds the content to the discs, to subsequently add the desired image. The image technology preferably implements a modulation of pit and land lengths as is known in the art, although a relatively simple graphics program can be used to translate an input image into the required exposure pattern on the image data areas.
In a related embodiment, the recordable media (e.g., a recordable DVD-R) is supplied to the end user in a blank state. Then, when data are recorded to the blank media by the end user, a simple executable routine at the end user level adds the graphics based on the content being added to the disc. One way would be to detect the content (e.g., via the Internet) being written to the disc and form an appropriate image reflecting the same (e.g., the name of an artist or game provider, a content title, etc.). Alternatively, the end user is provided with the option of selecting the graphics to be added to individually personalize the medium (e.g., “Jeff's Disc,” etc.).
Another aspect of the image/data arrangements as embodied herein allows the provision of images on multiple recording layers in discs and other media that incorporate multiple recording layers. The images can be separate or “combined” to provide the final image. Also, one layer can have a “premastered” image and the other layer could have a writable image that is formed at a later time (e.g., the first image on a first layer identifies the source of the medium, the second image on a second layer identifies the title of the content, and so on).
From the foregoing discussion, and the attached materials, it can be readily seen that preferred embodiments of the present invention provide an efficient and effective methodology for providing human detectable image data (watermarks) on storage media such as optical discs. While it is contemplated in preferred embodiments to use the same recording equipment to provide both image and user data, such is not necessarily required.
Further, it is not necessarily required that the image data provided along the interspersed image tracks be expressed in the form of pits and lands, but rather can be expressed in any number of types of marks including embossment, dyes, ink jet writing, etc. to provide the image data to the image tracks. While the respective image tracks and data tracks have been preferably shown to each include a full 360 degree circuit, such is not necessarily required; for example, without limitation the track pitch between an adjacent pair of data tracks can vary along a selected angular extent of the track to accommodate an intervening image track that only extends for a portion of a complete circumference of the medium.
It will be clear that the present invention is well adapted to attain the ends and advantages mentioned as well as those inherent therein. While presently preferred embodiments have been described for purposes of this disclosure, numerous changes may be made which will readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art and which are encompassed in the appended claims.
Carson, Douglas M., Shore, Anthony Paul
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Sep 26 2006 | SHORE, ANTHONY PAUL | DC IP, LLC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 018443 | /0379 | |
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